Anna Hazare: A fasting activist turns a national icon
28 AUG, 2011, 12.39PM IST, IANS

NEW DELHI: He drove a truck for the army during the 1965 India-Pakistan war, 
but when Anna Hazare broke his fast on day 13 Sunday after the Indian 
parliament agreed to his three demands for a stronger anti-graft legislation 
the school dropout had won for the people a war against the powerful 
establishment. 

It was a civic-government standoff, broadcast live to the nation by the 
incessantly chattering 24x7 TV news channels, and at the centre of this 
spectacular reality show was a frail and fasting 74-year-old man who became a 
veritable nightmare for the ruling political class, but a hero of the urban 
middle class reeling under pervasive corruption and an unresponsive system. 

Heroes are born in trying times, and in Hazare, who once sold flowers for a 
living, middle India has found an icon who echoed their growing disgust with 
scandal after scandal. Filmstar Aamir Khan spoke for many in India when he told 
Anna supporters amid singing and chanting that "Anna is the real hero". 

"Anna has inspired us all. He has acted as a symbol of public aspirations and a 
bridge between the old and the youth against the increasing corruption," says 
Goverdhan Singh Jamwal, 84-year-old major general, who took part in the Hazare 
movement. 

Hazare, who has deftly deployed Gandhian weapons of fasting to protest against 
corruption and injustice in his native village of Ralegan Siddhi and in 
Maharashtra where he has taken up diverse causes, came into the national 
spotlight in April when he fasted for five days for a strong Lokpal bill. It 
forced the government to form a 10-member panel to draft the legislation. 

Four months later, Hazare undertook another fast for the same cause when he saw 
that the government had not agreed to all their conditions and this time he 
captured the people's imagination - thanks to 24X7 TV coverage of his movement 
- like few have in the last few decades. He became a national icon when he was 
arrested Aug 16 before he began his fast and was put in Tihar jail and was 
released under mounting public pressure. 

After 12 days of fasting and sustained media attention, fed astutely by his 
SMS-wielding tech-savvy minders, Hazare may have got unprecedented national 
limelight now, but the diminutive activist, clad in the traditional white 
kurta-pyjama and a Gandhi cap, has been a quiet revolutionary back in his home 
state Maharashtra for decades. 

Much like Mahatma Gandhi, Anna Hazare -- born Kisan Baburao Hazare -- began his 
activist life in a humble way. 

His first target was his own village, Ralegan Siddhi in Ahmednagar district. It 
was a miserable and drought-prone place with insufficient rainfall and lacking 
any economic base. In 1975, he launched watershed development programmes and 
persuaded people to change their ways and managed to transform the barely 
breathing village to one Mahatma Gandhi would have been proud of.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/anna-hazare-a-fasting-activist-turns-a-national-icon/articleshow/9767887.cms

~Avelino

Reply via email to